Again, to me it's a waste of time worrying about what all this has to do with 'sinning and morality' because the key aspects go once again, missing, when people get onto this 'sin/sinning' bandwagon like they always do. Apparently, in their minds, God is incapable of intervening against ordinary human women and in this case, Lot's daughters - He seems to know many things, but all of a sudden, every now and then, He just goes to sleep or something and some 'bad' or untoward, undesired thing 'happens' under His sleeping nose. And then, instead of wiping out the Moabites - since apparently they were 'bad/evil/against God' - like He did to the S & G's, no, He can't do this again and He has to use 'the Nation of Israel' to go wipe them out... ...eventually. And for some reason He can destroy whole cities but He cannot procure some female for Lot to continue his line with.
The Moabite Stone - aka 'Meshe Stele' of King Meshe of Moab, around 1000BC. |
It's just all a lot of mixed up notions that people have about things that were said to have happened in the ancient past.
Actually, this story is another one of these 'post-Atlantis' narratives. There is one in Greek culture, wherein, the survivors were lucky to live at all, and were pretty traumatized and by the second generation after the catastrophe, all they retained from their original culture, were their names - which the Greeks later said were not 'Greek' in origin and attested to the 'fact' that these people were indeed survivors from the Great Flood of Atlantis. These stories are basically everywhere - American Indian, Sub-Continent Indian, Nordic, they are everywhere.
The Moabites were the survivors from the destruction of Sodom & Gomorrah.
So then we're really looking at something that completely pre-dates 'Israel.' 'Lot' means 'veiled.'
So what's veiled within the human race, or the over all genetic pool, so to speak?
'Israel' ends up entirely killing off the 'Moabites.'
Except not, right? Because David was a Moabite.
Now, if you want to 'get' what is there in this short video clip, it's required to take on board that this music is made by Irish fairies... This is straight-out Celtic or Gaelic folk music.
Wikipedia does not deliver the common tale about 'Oh Danny Boy' and how it was composed but it does mention that one of the Irish bards went to Eglinton Castle, in Scotland, and that there are poems there about the 'guid wee green folk' who hide in the bluebells and the foxgloves in Eglinton Woods.
Like an 'elf,' right? |
But what I want you to do, is think about the Star Wars 'Death Star,' rather than some run-down moss-covered wooden shack hidden in the glens, with just a thin line of smoke from a small peat fire in the hearth, to show evidence of habitation. Because the music is just too clever by half.
...With us, we all stand around and wait, to see if someone has heard us, when we are deep in the woods, whistling to the fairy folk, asking for a piece of the action from whoever has the pot of gold, or from the silver dancers by the moonlight. It's damp and the light is failing from the end of the day. And there's no one there.
The bluebells of Eglinton Woods... |
No one, right.
At 1:30 in - the fairy stray. ...And watch your step. Because they know exactly, what they are doing.